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Miscellaneous See other Miscellaneous Articles Title: Body found at Dyatlov Pass where 9 hikers mysteriously died in 1959 Body found at Dyatlov Pass where 9 hikers mysteriously died in 1959 © Ekaterina Vlasenko / Sputnik A body has been discovered by tourists at the infamous Dyatlov Pass in Russias Ural Mountains where nine hikers mysteriously died in 1959. Emergency services have reportedly momentarily lost contact with the group. An unidentified body has been discovered by tourist-hikers at the infamous Dyatlov pass in Sverdlovskaya region, according to local security officials. A group of nine tourists reportedly from Perm contacted emergency services overnight on Friday. Following a message from the group via satellite phone officials lost contact with the hikers, reported V-kurse.ru. Due to bad weather conditions emergency groups are unable to reach the barely-accessible site where the body was found. Some reports suggest that it is a male of about 50 years old. The travelers began their journey on January 1 trekking along one of the most difficult paths starting from North Ural to the town of Ivdel, according to the emergency services. The site where body was reportedly located is infamous for the tragic and mysterious deaths of nine hikers in 1959. The causes of their deaths are still unknown while the case is surrounded with controversy. The Dyatlov pass was named after the leader of the hiking group that went missing, Igor Dyatlov. The group consisted of graduate students from of the Ural Polytechnic Institute. Their plan was to trek 350 kilometers on skis through the forests and Northern Urals to Mount Otorten (which is translated from the local Mansi language as Dont go There). Initially there were 10 people in the group, but one of the hikers fell ill and was forced to abandon the venture. On February 12, 1959 the nine failed to report to the scheduled end-point at a village called Vizhay. As a result of rescue efforts, the groups tent was found on the slope of the Mount Kholat Syakhl (Mountain of the Dead in Mansi) on February 26. Investigators later determined that tent had been was cut with a sharp object from the inside. The skiers also left all their belongings in the tent while apparently trying to urgently flee the campsite. After following footprints down the hill for about 1.5 km some of those fleeing were wearing only socks, some were even barefoot the search party found five bodies. Some of the hikers were wearing only underwear and their bodies showed signs of struggle such as fractured skulls and broken ribs. One of the women had her tongue missing. The search for the remaining four travelers who were located further into the woods took more than two months. The Soviet criminal investigation in 1959 failed to establish the causes of the incident. The final report said that an "unknown compelling force" killed the people. The incident which remains one of the most chilling unsolved mysteries of the 20th century sparked many theories in which investigators attempted to rebuild the chronology of events. The numerous explanations put forward included an avalanche, military tests seen by the hikers that the government was trying to hide, a hostile encounter with an unknown creature, or paranormal activity. The mystery of the Dyatlov Pass incident has inspired filmmakers to make a science fiction horror movie entitled Devils Pass where five students investigate the incident. Poster Comment: Hmmmm... Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 9.
#1. To: FormerLurker (#0)
If their tent was cut from the inside it sounds like one of the group turned on the rest and was a mass murderer. It would seem though that nine to one, they could've taken him out. But in a situation like that it sounds like each fled on their own, leading to their demise.
This is the last picture taken on one of the victim's (Yuri Krivonischenko) camera..
What do you think happened to them?
I wonder if the current day hikers are meeting a similar fate. Did you note that contact with them has been lost?
#10. To: All (#9)
This is a weird case all right. Skeptoid purports to totally demystify it -- lemme know what yawl think of this 10-minute spiel.
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